The Weekly Daf #160
Bechoros 53-59
Week of 24-30 Adar 1 5757 / 3-9 March 1997 (Parshas Vayakhel)
By Rabbi Mendel Weinbach, Dean, Ohr Somayach Institutions
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This issue is sponsored by Herschel Kulefsky, Attorney at Law,
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Get ready for Purim:
Ohr Somayach presents 10 lectures from Rabbi Uziel Milevsky Z"L on
Megillat Esther: http://www.ohr.org.il/audio/ra/milevsky/index.htm
3 Corners, 2 Guys and a Night in Persia by Rabbi Mordechai Becher:
http://www.ohr.org.il/audio/ra/becher/index.htm
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The Tithe that Was
The Torah commanded every Jew to tithe his cattle and to offer the tenth cow,
sheep or goat as a sacrifice whose flesh is eaten by its owner. By Torah law
this applies even when there is no Beis Hamikdash in which to offer a
sacrifice, and the tithed animal cannot be consumed until it develops a
blemish which disqualifies it as a sacrifice. Our Sages saw a need to
forestall a problem which could arise from such a situation. While a Jew is
waiting for a blemish to develop he might come to transgress the ban on
shearing or working with such a sacred animal, or may even slaughter and eat
its flesh before the blemish develops. They therefore decreed that tithing of
cattle should be suspended, preferring a passive non-performance of a mitzvah,
to an active violation of a ban.
This raises a question in regard to what the Talmud (Shabbos 54b) relates
about the wealth of Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah, whose annual tithe of calves was
12,000. This sage was a minor when the Beis Hamikdash was destroyed, so that
this tithing had to take place only when there was no longer a place to bring
sacrifices. How then did he practice cattle tithing in opposition to the
aforementioned rabbinical decree?
Three resolutions of this problem are found in the commentary of Tosefos in
this and other masechtos:
1. The tithing took place while there was still a Beis Hamikdash and was
performed by a guardian of the sage who was still a minor.
2. The tithing referred to was not the performance of the mitzvah, but rather
a payment of a ten percent tax to the government, and is mentioned only to
illustrate the extensive wealth of the sage.
3. The decree against cattle tithing did not come into being immediately with
the destruction of the Beis Hamikdash, only years later, so that in the
days of Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah it was still in practice.
Bechoros 53b
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The Mysterious "Kareiach"
"All the sages of Israel seem to be in comparison with me like garlic skin,
except for this kareiach."
Thus declared the great sage Shimon ben Azai.
Who was this kareiach whose greatness was thus acknowledged, and how does this
Hebrew word for "bald one" characterize him?
Rashi identifies him as Rabbi Akiva, a contemporary of Ben Azai. He bases
this on the fact that Rabbi Yehoshua ben Karcha was actually the son of Rabbi
Akiva, so that the father was also known by a nickname associated with
baldness.
Tosefos finds difficulty with this approach because it is unlikely that Ben
Azai would refer to Rabbi Akiva in such an uncomplimentary way rather than by
name. Two alternative approaches are proposed:
1. He was referring to Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah who was indeed bald and there
was no denigration intended in this physical description.
2. There was actually a sage named "Kareiach" and there is no relationship
between the name and baldness.
In regard to the statement itself the commentaries point out that it should
not be misconstrued as a boast by Ben Azai of his intellectual superiority.
His intention was to inspire other scholars to apply themselves diligently to
their studies by citing his own scholastic achievements which were not the
result of his natural brilliance alone but of his extreme diligence.
(For another explanation of Ben Azai's remark see "Garlic-Skin Modesty" in the
Weekly Daf (Vol. 4 No. 4) for week ending 20 Cheshvan, 5757, Nov. 2, `96.)
Bechoros 58a
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